The Role of Google Adwords in Your B2B Strategy

Google and Google Adwords are complex and continue to change rapidly. For B2B businesses, Adwords can be very challenging, but it can also be the catalyst to success in your overall campaign. 

You’ve used Google before, right? Given that Google processes over 3.5 billion searches per day, it’s probably safe to assume you have. You {likely} use Google to search for things like clothes, housewares, and more… As a consumer. But what about as a business professional? Do you ever search for work-related things? Search for an answer to a problem? I imagine if you’re using it for that purpose, your customers are as well, which is why it’s important that you consider it in your strategy. 

In this post, we’ll cover how Google Adwords can play a role in your B2B strategy, including:

  • What role Google Adwords plays in B2B specifically
  • How B2B and B2C Adword strategies differ
  • How to successfully target your B2B buyer with Google Adwords
  • Goal and budget setting for your PPC campaign

10 Google Search Statistics You Need to Know [April 2020]

Image Source: Oberlo.com

Google Adwords and Your B2B Strategy

To better understand the B2B Adwords strategy, one must first understand the role it plays in the overall B2B marketing strategy. Just like any other tool in your toolbox, Google Adwords plays its own critical role. Put simply, its main role is to find the right people who are directly or indirectly searching for your products or services and provide them with the answers they’re seeking. 

Your target personas have many questions and pain points and will almost always turn to Google for those answers. To put this into perspective, Pardot surveyed over 400 B2B buyers and found that 78% of B2B buyers turn to Google search after consulting with a colleague. Google Adwords allows your business to be there as soon as your personas hit that search bar. What’s more, if you’re not using Google Adwords, your competitors likely are. They will be there to answer those questions even if you aren’t. 

B2B vs. B2C Adwords Strategy

So, how do you adjust your strategy to tailor it to B2B buyers? B2B and B2C marketing in general differ mainly in their target audiences and the strategies used to reach them. Adwords is no different. This means there will be significant differences in your overall account structure, how you target your personas, what types of keywords you use, how you write ad copy and how you remarket. It all starts with knowing your B2B buyer persona. 

The B2B Buyer Persona

Your persona and how you target your persona can arguably be the most important part of your campaign. The B2B and B2C persona actually have a lot in common. They both have a goal, a problem to solve, change drivers, and a sales cycle associated with them. That said, the B2B buyer is much more complex. Unlike the B2C buyer, their main goal isn’t focused on personal things like entertainment and other luxuries. Their goals are focused more on ROI, increased efficiencies, solving a problem, and their organization’s needs as a whole. An important question to ask yourself is not only what your persona is looking for, but what their organization is looking for. Once you answer those questions, you’ll be better able to target that persona more effectively. 

B2B vs B2C marketing

Image Source: Wordstream.com

Targeting the B2B Persona

Just like any other campaign, ask yourself what the key demographics of your persona are:

  • Where are they hanging out digitally?
  • What age group are they in?
  • What is their job title and role?
  • Do they have the power within their organization to make decisions?
  • Do they have to consult with many others before taking action?

All of these questions are a great place to start and can help you narrow down your audience. A great way to target these factors of your audience is by utilizing audience lists imported from analytics, custom intent audiences, and custom affinity audiences. 

These features in Adwords help you target users based on things like what they’re interested in, what sites they frequently visit, what they search for most often, and what “market” they’re in. Learn more about these strategies here

Keep in mind not to get too narrow with your targeting. Each time you apply an audience, interest, or category, you are decreasing your reach. Try to test a few aspects at a time and different combinations of them. For example, you might have one campaign that targets people in the market for sports and nutrition items, and another campaign that targets people who frequently visit websites about sports teams and healthy recipes. Test combinations of audiences and tailor your ad copy to be helpful and relevant.

b2b buyers journey

Selecting the Right Keywords

As mentioned above, search intent is essential to a B2B Adwords strategy. You won’t always know what keywords are most likely to convert right off the bat. B2B buyers often ask much more complex questions when they search on Google than B2C buyers. They typically use long-tail keywords and phrases when they search instead of directly searching for a specific product or solution. 

When setting your campaign keywords, don’t get too granular. Start by casting a wide net using:

  • Broad match
  • Broad match modified
  • Phrase match keywords

This allows your campaign to pull in search term data. Next, give your campaign a good amount of time so you can gain insight into how your customers are searching and what they’re looking for. As the data comes in, analyze the search terms report to find potential keywords to add to your campaign and to add as negative keywords. 

Over time, you’ll start to notice trends in the search terms report that point toward a specific customer action. Keep your eye out for search terms that may express an opportunity for a new keyword group.

Pro Tip: Put the higher-performing keywords in their own ad group so you can treat them individually. You may add bid adjustments, ad copy changes, or add highly relevant extensions.

Carefully Approach Your Ad Copy

The biggest thing to keep in mind when writing Google Adwords copy for a B2B buyer is that you aren’t going to be the only company on their radar. You need to make sure the ad copy is relevant and will get their attention. This applies to almost every Google Ads strategy but much more in a B2B Adwords strategy because the B2B buyer tends to do a lot more comparison shopping and research than a B2C buyer. 

So, when you think about creating your ad copy, ask yourself how you would stand out to the user. Look at your ad and put yourself in the consumer’s shoes. Ask yourself: 

  • What would make you click on it? 
  • What elements or phrasing tend to catch your eye? 
  • What would make it more appealing than the others? 

Try to highlight your organization’s strengths and showcase the value you add as much as possible. Most people aren’t looking for a list of features, they’re looking for a solution to a problem. Focus on how you can solve that problem and what you can do for them. 

Pro Tip: Once you have ad copy you like that’s tailored to your buyer, give it time to see how it performs. With a little data under your belt, we suggest doing A/B testing to see which ads perform better than others. Adjust accordingly. 

Setting Your Goals and Budget for Google Adwords

Last, but certainly not least, when building your campaign, ask yourself “what is my main goal?” and “what is my budget?” Your campaign goal and budget will help you dictate what the overall account structure will look like and how you approach its various components. Start by defining success and what KPIs are most important. 

Goals

A goal or measure of success could look like a lead: 

  • Contacting you via phone
  • Filling out a form
  • Downloading a resource
  • Spending a certain amount of time on a page
  • Registering for an event or blog subscription

If the main objective or goal is to have leads contact you via phone, followed closely by filling out a form, then you may consider having a campaign for each of those things. Segment out your campaigns by these goals. This way you can tailor certain settings and targeting to each. 

Pro Tip: No matter what your goals are, make sure they’re SMART. Specific – Measurable – Attainable – Relevant – Timely.

Budget

You should have a sense of what your budget is as you’re creating campaigns and have hard and fast numbers ready for launch. It’s ideal to have different campaigns with different campaign types, strategies, and then run tests within those campaigns. However, your campaign and what you’re able to do is restricted by your overall budget. 

It wouldn’t make sense to bid on top of funnel keywords with a small budget. So, if your budget is small, focus on what will be most profitable for you, and dedicate a few keywords at a time for things like testing and data mining. 

This is just the tip of the Google Adwords iceberg and the role it can play in your B2B strategy. But once you understand the role it plays, how to target your persona, identify keywords, and set up a campaign for success, the next thing to do is to try it out for yourself. 

Still not convinced or looking for some guidance on how to successfully set up, launch and manage your Google Adwords strategy for B2B? One of our strategists can help. Let’s chat Adwords!

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Press Play on Your B2B Revenue Growth: 6 Benefits of Video Marketing

Sometimes a new channel, platform, or tool comes along in the business world that you just know is here to stay. At least for a while. Video is one of them. It’s not one of those tools that’s “nice to have” anymore. Incorporating video into your sales and marketing strategies is a must-have that warrants your attention.

While video marketing has been around for a while in B2C, now thanks to the many benefits of video marketing we’re seeing B2B come around to it and use it in their:

  • Sales processes 
  • Marketing campaigns 
  • Social media platforms 
  • Lead generation efforts 
  • Email marketing 
  • Outreach pitches 
  • And More! 

Learn How Lake One Uses Vidyard for Video

What is Video Marketing 

According to HubSpot, video marketing is using videos to promote and market your product or service, increase engagement on your digital and social channels, educate your consumers and customers, and reach your audience with a new medium. 

What are the Benefits of Video Marketing for Business 

Increase Brand Awareness and Consumer Trust

Video is a great way to increase your brand awareness. It allows your customer base to grow by helping more people find out who you are and what you do in a more engaging way. With 54% of consumers wanting to see more video content from a brand or business they support, you need to be sure you’re one of those brands or businesses or your competitors will. 

Image Source: Oberlo.com

Meet your customers or potential customers where they are and in the format they want. By incorporating video marketing into your strategy, you’ll increase your brand awareness, build consumer trust and increase your online presence.

Increase Conversion Rates

More than just increasing your brand awareness and getting in front of your prospects, one of the biggest benefits of video marketing is the increase it can provide to your conversion rates and generate leads. Smart Insights noted that embedding a video on your site can increase conversion rates by up to 80%

Here are a few ways to incorporate video to help boost your conversion rates: 

  • Add video to your high traffic landing pages 
  • Insert a lead capture form in your videos 
  • Add video to your thank you pages
  • Include videos in your prospecting emails 
  • Send a personalized video to high-potential leads who download your resources 
  • Add video to other pages on your website, client testimonials, such as solutions pages, and more

Boost Social Media Engagement

According to Animoto, video is consumers’ #1 favorite type of content to see from brands on social media. If you want to engage with your customers in a way that gets their attention, video is it. Not only that, but video is the most shared content on social media. 

In fact, Facebook actually places a higher priority on video content. Engadget says that Facebook will prioritize videos that people seek out and return to repeatedly. It will also add weight to videos that keep people engaged for at least a minute, especially if those videos are three minutes or longer. Facebook is placing a higher priority on video content because they know that’s what users want.

Remain Relevant in Your Industry 

Video isn’t going away anytime soon and if they haven’t already, your competitors will start using video in their sales and marketing efforts.

benefits of video marketing
Source: HubSpot

If you want to remain competitive and relevant in your industry and among your potential buyers and current customers, then video needs to be in the picture. Given the fact that buyers are consuming video at increasing rates, it’s not a matter of if you need to use video, but when. That “when” is today and right now. 

Increase Ad Effectiveness

Your buyers are inundated with ads on the internet daily. So much so that we as consumers have learned to tune them out to an extent. Sidebar, banner and other ads of this nature tend to just blend in now and are sort of white noise. Well, video helps cut through all of that noise and grab the attention of your prospects.  

Image Source: Dreamgrow.com 

According to DreamGrow, the average click-through-rate of video ads is 1.84%. Out of all the digital ad formats, video has the highest CTR. They go on to note that for a 15-second non-skippable YouTube video, the ad completion rate is 92%. 

SEO Boost 

Looking to get a little SEO juice behind your content? Another benefit of video marketing is the lift it can give to your SEO (search engine optimization) efforts. How? Well, one of the things that Google factors in when it comes to search result rankings is time spent on the site. Are you providing what the visitors are looking for? Video is a great way to engage visitors and provide them with the information they need. So when they spend time watching your videos, Google interprets that as you providing the information the visitor is seeking, which can ultimately move you up in search result rankings. 

Strong ROI 

This might all sound well and fine, but we know what you’re thinking…. “Show me the money!” Or the stats in this case: 

via GIPHY

  • 73% of B2B marketers say video positively impacts their ROI. (Tubular Insights)
  • 52% of marketers say video is the type of content with the best ROI. (HubSpot)
  • 89% of video marketers say video gives them a good ROI and 80% of video marketers say video has directly helped increase sales. (Wyzowl)
  • 83% of those using video believe they get a good ROI from it with 82% believing it’s a key part of their strategy (Smart Insights)
  • The global software company Zycus saw a 6.6x ROI on campaigns using Vidyard (Vidyard)

When measuring the ROI of video, you’ll want to monitor performance right away, based on metrics you’ve determined are relevant to your overall goals. Metrics like views, engagement, conversion rate, social shares, total cost, and whatever other metrics are important to you. 

Related Reading: How and Why to Incorporate Sales Videos into Your Selling Process

Now that you know all the benefits of video marketing, what’s stopping you from incorporating it into your strategy? Maybe you’re camera shy, not sure what type of content to create, or it could be that you don’t know what the best tool is to create quality, worth watching videos. We can help with that. As a Vidyard Partner, we’re here to help you turbocharge your growth engine with video for sales and marketing

Book a free 15-minute strategy session with a Lake One Video expert.

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Lake One Becomes a Vidyard Partner

Lake One® announced today that they have officially become a Vidyard Partner and Video Selling Certified agency. Vidyard is an online video platform for business that allows you to increase leads, accelerate your pipeline , and delight your customers. With this partnership, Lake One looks to enable their clients with the power of video

“Through our new partnership, Lake One has the expertise they need to help clients transform the way they market and sell with engaging and personalized video content,” says Tyler Lessard, VP Marketing at Vidyard. “By leveraging Vidyard’s solutions in an integrated way with HubSpot, we’re already seeing joint customers generating more sales opportunities by taking a more personal and impactful approach to how they connect with new prospects. We’re excited to see Lake One bring these ideas to more businesses to help them grow faster in an increasingly digital world.”

Lake One launched in 2014 and has grown every year since, with a belief that business can pursue both profit and purpose. As a virtual marketing team, based in Minneapolis, it supports organization’s who have complex buying processes including Technology, Manufacturing, and professional services in healthcare, IT and staffing.  

“Lake One takes a consultative approach to understanding the challenges businesses face today, and to deliver solutions that have an immediate impact on their success,” says Ali Hammoud, Partner Account Manager at Vidyard. “We’re thrilled to partner with Lake One to help more businesses integrate video into their marketing and sales programs in a way that aligns with their goals and how they currently go to market.”

“Video usage continues to surge and we’ve been in search of a technology partner that fits well into the solutions we support our clients with – driving aligned sales and marketing growth. Vidyard fits that need, integrating with the existing sales and marketing tools our clients are already using and empowers both sides of the revenue team to grow with video. We’re thrilled to partner with these leaders in video technology.” says Rachael Cecko, Sr. Director of Operations at Lake One

About Lake One: Founded in 2014, Lake One is a revenue operations and growth firm based in Minneapolis, MN. They partner with B2B organizations to compete and win online by planning, building and implementing aligned sales and marketing programs. They help organizations navigate sales and marketing technology decisions to deploy right sized tools that scale program performance. 


About Vidyard: Vidyard helps businesses and professionals connect with their audiences in a whole new way through engaging, personalized, and measurable video experiences. Through its global video hosting and analytics platform, Vidyard empowers businesses like Honeywell, Citibank, and HubSpot to transform their approach to marketing, sales, and corporate communications. Through its free and pro tools, Vidyard helps any business professional create and share custom videos to deliver their message in a more personal and impactful way. Thousands of businesses and millions of people around the world rely on Vidyard for their video needs. Sign up for Vidyard for free: https://www.vidyard.com/free-screen-record

5 Ways Lake One Uses Vidyard for B2B Video Marketing

The cameras are rolling around here at Lake One. While we don’t have our own personal glam teams (yet), we do have everything else we need to create solid content for our B2B video marketing efforts. How do we do it, you ask? Well, with the help of our trusty partners, Vidyard. If you haven’t heard of them, (which isn’t likely) Vidyard is an online video platform for businesses. From video creation, hosting, integrations, sharing, optimization, and analytics, they make it pretty impossible to have an excuse not to be doing video. 

Which, if you aren’t, you should include video as part of your sales and marketing strategy. B2B video marketing is a must and not just because we say so. The numbers speak for themselves. Content Marketing Institute found that 71% of B2B marketers use video marketing and 66% of B2C marketers use it. Not to mention the ROI. Optinmonster noted that video marketers get 66% more qualified leads per year and 93% of marketers say they landed new customers by using video on social media. 

B2B Video Marketing

Here are five ways that Lake One uses Vidyard for our b2b video marketing efforts:

Lead Generation/Prospecting

Ever feel like your lead generation efforts are the same old, same old? Looking to spice things up and even have a little fun? If only there was something that could help with that. 

Video is a great and often overlooked tool when it comes to lead generation and prospecting. A few ways to use video for lead gen: 

  • Add video to your landing pages 
  • Add video to other pages on your website, such as solutions pages, client testimonials and more
  • Add video to your thank you pages or send a personalized video to high-value leads who download resources off of your website 
  • Include videos in your prospecting emails 

Pro Tip: Be sure to include a CTA (call-to-action) at the end of your videos. Let viewers know what action you want them to take after watching your content.

Lead Nurturing

Since the goal of lead nurturing is to move someone through the buyer’s journey from the awareness stage to the decision stage, video is a great way to help achieve that. Especially for things like email nurture sequences (drip campaigns), it’s a nice way to break-up the content that’s in the emails and get your lead’s attention. Here are just a few types of videos you can use when nurturing leads: 

Related Reading: Turn Your Website Into a Lead Machine with HubSpot Lead Flows

  • Demo or explainer videos
  • Interviews with thought leaders
  • Promoting upcoming webinars or events your company is hosting or sponsoring 
  • Testimonials from clients that showcase the value they received from your product or service 
  • Educational videos that are relevant and provide value to your viewer 
Video Marketing stat
Source: Neil Patel

Client Management 

When it comes to managing client relationships, it can be easy to get caught up in an endless cycle of emails calls back and forth. While sometimes picking up the phone can solve for that, it doesn’t always accomplish everything you need it to. That’s where videos come in to play. 

Meetings 

It used to be commonplace to meet with clients in their offices for kick-off, monthly or quarterly meetings. That all changed virtually overnight, amidst the COVID-19 pandemic. While Zoom and other video conferencing tools are great, sometimes what needs to be accomplished can be done in a video. Whether it’s a training, showing a client where to locate something, or a simple introduction video, Vidyard is a great tool to be able to manage clients. 

Training

At Lake One, especially since we’re a virtual team, we love using Vidyard for training purposes, whether for ourselves or for clients. One team member, I won’t name names, even refers to their internal training videos as “Trainings with Tiffany.” We didn’t say you couldn’t have fun with the tool, in fact, we encourage it. 

With Vidyard you can record yourself on camera, record the screen or a combination of both, so people can see exactly what you’re doing when training. We’ve built up a library of sorts for training for both ourselves and clients. It’s a great way to go back and rewatch something or provide videos to team members who might have missed a live training session. 

Vidyard will also transcribe your videos too, whether you’re creating videos directly on the platform or uploading them from elsewhere. This is a nice feature for accessibility reasons, but also if you want to repurpose the video content, you already have the transcription ready to go. 

Outreach

Which would you rather receive in your inbox? A generic email with a bunch of buzzwords, going on and on about guest posts and how much someone loves your “most recent piece” all in an effort to partner for link building purposes. Or, would you rather get an email that features an engaging video that’s short and to the point, briefly touching on the topics and value this person could add to your site? I don’t know about you, but I choose door number two.

We use video to either replace or support the messages we send surrounding our outreach efforts. It’s a great way to humanize ourselves and get our message across quickly. It’s also sometimes easier to explain an idea out loud, versus trying to capture it in writing. Plus, with any luck, you’ll stand out from the other pitches that your prospects are receiving. 

Content 

We know that video is a must when it comes to B2B video marketing and creating the type of content that buyers want to consume. Considering that 85% of all internet users in the U.S. watched online video content monthly on any of their devices, it’s no longer an option whether you incorporate video into your content plan or not. Here are a few places to use and types of videos you can create:

  • Blog posts
  • Social posts
  • Sales emails 
  • Demo or explainer videos 
  • Website, in place of other graphics 
  • Email marketing campaigns 
  • Long-form videos/webinars 
  • Customer testimonials
  • And more! 

Related Reading: How Engaging is Your Content Marketing? 5 KPIs to Measure Content Engagement

Thanks to Vidyards reporting capabilities, you’re able to see who’s watching your videos, from where, for how long, and get insight into how your videos are actually performing. Like any content, video for the sake of video isn’t a strategy and won’t drive the results you’re looking to achieve. Be methodical in the videos you’re creating and putting out there. These are just a few ways that Lake One uses Vidyard. If you have any fun ways you use it, drop a note in the comments.

Interested to learn how Lake One can help you with video? One of our strategists would love to chat.

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